NA-MIC Project WeeksOrbital fractures are typically caused by blunt-force trauma. Fracture repair frequently requires placing a titanium plate to reconstruct bony orbit and restore tissue position and function from disturbed conditions, such as enophthalmos (“sunken eye”) and muscle entrapment & conformational changes.
This project aims to develop a reproducible patient-specific SOFA/SlicerSOFA FEM simulation workflow to predict orbital soft tissue restoration after fracture repair using a preformed titanium plate.
The simulation processes span across multiple scenes from retracting orbital tissue to place a plate and then let the tissue fall onto the plate. The only deformable object is a unified multi-material orbital tissue mesh. The retracting tool, plate, and bony orbit are all simulated as collision-only boundary conditions.
Currently, collision constraints computation has been identified as a major simulation bottleneck because orbital tissue is confined in the bony orbit. Tissue in fracture orbit also has localized protrusions representing fat herniation that have to be retracted.
Another difficulty is about scene setups and parameter tuning, such as boundary conditions and constraints, including bone-tissue attachment and retracting tool moving trajectory and contour, and experimenting with different parameters and methods.
The main objective is to streamline workflow reproducibility and improve efficiency for patient-specific simulation:
Implement Slicer methods to:
No response